Saturday, October 6, 2012

Know Your Limits - Business Liability

The objective of the Commercial General Liability policy is
to provide coverage in the event of a lawsuit when bodily injury or property
damage occurs due to your business operations.
The limits on your policy have separate functions to protect your assets
in several ways.

The Each Occurrence Limit is the most that the policy will
pay out for any one occurrence on the policy.
If you have a $500,000 limit and a $600,000 loss takes place, your
policy will only respond to the first $500,000 and you will be responsible for
the remaining $100,000 in damages.

The General Aggregate Limit is the most the policy will pay
out for all losses in a single policy period.
For instance, your policy has a $1,000,000 aggregate and you have
multiple claims totaling $1,000,000. The
policy will act in response to the $1,000,000 aggregate limit and then stop.

The Products and Completed Operations Aggregate reacts to
all losses due to a completed operation or product claim up to the policy
limit. This limit comes into play when a
service has been completed and that service later results in a loss. An auto repair shop does a tune-up on a
vehicle and the mechanic does not correctly replace the oil plug when he is done. Only after the vehicle is released into the
owners possession does the loss occur, yet it is still the shop’s
responsibility for the loss. This would
be covered under the completed operation limit.

The Personal and Advertising Injury Limit is each occurrence
based on a personal or advertising injury offence. This limit covers you for injuries such as
libel and slander to another party. If
your competitor loses business due to statements you make about their
operation, they may have legal recourse against you. This type claim would be subject to the
Personal and Advertising Injury limit.

The Medical Expense Limit is on the policy to pay for bodily
injury claims regardless of fault. If a
person is injured on your premises, the policy will likely pay for the injuries
up to the medical expense limit. This
limit is used as a good-will gesture to dissuade larger liability suits from
materializing.

Be sure to check your general liability limits and ask your
agent for optional quotes on higher amounts if needed.

I am a Certified Insurance Counselor in Osage BeachMO. Follow me on Facebook or if you have questions you can reach me by email.

9 comments:

Thank you for this deep insight! Insurance can be very confusing depending on the side and point of view of every party. But it becomes a lot easier with people like you taking time to help all of us understand what is right, and what is not.

I thought this was a loaded article of what you need to know when who's liable! I'm looking into railroad insurance since we live so close to a railroad. I always take the it to work and want to know what I can gain from this insurance. What is your take or insight on railroad insurance?Celine | http://www.hmbd.com/railroad-insurance.html

Insurance policy comes with a lot of benefits.If you got injured in any accident the policy will likely pay for the injuries up to the medical expense limit. This limit is used as a good-will gesture to dissuade larger liability suits from materializing.

Well, this post certainly goes to show why liability coverage is so important - look at those figures! $1 million? You better believe I don't want to have to pay that out of pocket in a worst case scenario.